Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Days Of '49, artist - Hammers of Misfortune. Album song Dead Revolution, in the genre Прогрессив-метал
Date of issue: 21.07.2016
Record label: Metal Blade Records
Song language: English
Days Of '49 |
Old Tom Moore, from the bummer’s shore in the good old golden days |
They call me a bummer and a ginsot too, but what cares I for praise? |
I rove around from town to town, folks call me a roving sign |
«Yes, just Old Tom Moore, he’s a bummer sure, from the days of '49» |
My comrades they all loved me well, a jolly saucy crew |
A few hard cases I will recall, though they all were brave and true |
What’ere the pitch, they never would flinch, they never would fret nor whine |
Like good old bricks, they stood the kicks in the days of '49 |
In the days of old, in the days of gold |
How oft’times I repine for the days of old |
When we dug up the gold, in the days of '49 |
There was New York Jake, the butcher boy, he was always getting tight |
And every time that he’d get full, he was spoiling for a fight |
But Jake rampaged against a knife in the hands of old Tom Clay |
And over Jake they held a wake in the days of '49 |
There was Nantucket Bill, I knew him well, he was always fond of tricks |
At a poker game, he was always there, and ready with his bricks |
He would ante up and draw his cards, and he would you go a hatful blind |
In the game with death, he lost his breath, in the days of '49 |
There was Ragshag Bill from Buffalo, I never will forget |
He would roar all day and roar all night, and I guess he’s roaring yet |
One day he fell in a prospect hole of a roaring bad design |
And in that hole he roared out his soul, in the days of '49 |
Of the all friends that I had then, there’s no one left to toast |
And I’m left alone in my misery like some poor wandering ghost |
I just rove around from town to town, folks call me a roving sign |
«Yes, just Old Tom Moore, he’s a bummer sure, from the days of '49» |